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Also known as industrialization
thumb|The effect of industrialisation shown by rising income levels in the 19th century, including gross national product at [[purchasing power parity per capita between 1750 and 1900 in 1990 U.S. dollars for the First World, including Western Europe, United States, Canada and Japan, and Third World nations of Europe, Southern Asia, Africa, and Latin America]] thumb|The effect of industrialisation is also shown by rising levels of CO2 emissions. thumb|Industrialisation also means the mechanisation of traditionally manual economic sectors such as agriculture. thumb|Factories, refineries, mines,
Industrialisation is the process by which economies shift from manual labor and traditional methods to mechanised production using factories, machines, and new technologies—a transformation that has historically increased income levels and wealth. While industrialisation has driven significant economic growth, it has also led to increased environmental impacts, including rising CO2 emissions.
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).